forked from ServiceStack/ServiceStack
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
Caching
mythz edited this page Feb 8, 2011
·
30 revisions
A myriad of different, pluggable options are included in Service Stack for the most popular cache providers.
As caching is an essential technology in the development of high-performance web services, Service Stack has a number of different caching options available that each share the same common client interface for the following cache providers:
- Memcached - The tried and tested most widely used cache provider.
- Redis - A very fast key-value store that has non-volatile persistent storage and support for rich data structures such as lists and sets.
- In Memory Cache - Useful for single host web services and enabling unit tests to run without needing access to a cache server.
- FileAndCacheTextManager - A two-tiered cache provider that caches using one of the above cache clients as well as a compressed XML or JSON serialized backup cache on the file system.
//A common interface implementation that is implemeneted by most cache providers
public interface ICacheClient
: IDisposable
{
//Removes the specified item from the cache.
bool Remove(string key);
//Removes the cache for all the keys provided.
void RemoveAll(IEnumerable<string> keys);
//Retrieves the specified item from the cache.
T Get<T>(string key);
//Increments the value of the specified key by the given amount.
//The operation is atomic and happens on the server.
//A non existent value at key starts at 0
long Increment(string key, uint amount);
//Increments the value of the specified key by the given amount.
//The operation is atomic and happens on the server.
//A non existent value at key starts at 0
long Decrement(string key, uint amount);
//Adds a new item into the cache at the specified cache key only if the cache is empty.
bool Add<T>(string key, T value);
//Sets an item into the cache at the cache key specified regardless if it already exists or not.
bool Set<T>(string key, T value);
//Replaces the item at the cachekey specified only if an items exists at the location already.
bool Replace<T>(string key, T value);
bool Add<T>(string key, T value, DateTime expiresAt);
bool Set<T>(string key, T value, DateTime expiresAt);
bool Replace<T>(string key, T value, DateTime expiresAt);
bool Add<T>(string key, T value, TimeSpan expiresIn);
bool Set<T>(string key, T value, TimeSpan expiresIn);
bool Replace<T>(string key, T value, TimeSpan expiresIn);
//Invalidates all data on the cache.
void FlushAll();
//Retrieves multiple items from the cache.
//The default value of T is set for all keys that do not exist.
IDictionary<string, T> GetAll<T>(IEnumerable<string> keys);
//Sets multiple items to the cache.
void SetAll<T>(IDictionary<string, T> values);
}
- Why ServiceStack?
- What is a message based web service?
- Advantages of message based web services
- Why remote services should use separate DTOs
- Getting Started
- Reference
- Clients
- Formats
- View Engines 4. Razor & Markdown Razor
- Hosts
- Security
- Advanced
- Configuration options
- Access HTTP specific features in services
- Logging
- Serialization/deserialization
- Request/response filters
- Filter attributes
- Concurrency Model
- Built-in caching options
- Built-in profiling
- Form Hijacking Prevention
- Auto-Mapping
- HTTP Utils
- Virtual File System
- Config API
- Physical Project Structure
- Modularizing Services
- MVC Integration
- Plugins 3. Request logger 4. Swagger API
- Tests
- Other Languages
- Use Cases
- Performance
- How To
- Future